President Donald Trump assailed Britain's US ambassador as a "pompous fool" and slammed outgoing premier Theresa May's "foolish" policies in a second straight day of virulent attacks triggered by the leak of unflattering diplomatic cables.
The missives threaten to plunge Washington and London into an unprecedented diplomatic crisis with uncertain outcome, and have landed their author, British Ambassador Kim Darroch - and by default his prime minister - in Trump's crosshairs.
If the US president initially reacted with restraint over the cables' weekend publication, the tone has changed and heated passions do not seem about to subside.
"The wacky Ambassador that the U.K. foisted upon the United States is not someone we are thrilled with, a very stupid guy," Trump tweeted Tuesday, mirroring a furious barrage of insults the day before.
The US president's early morning wrath was not solely reserved for Darroch, however. Trump doubled down in attacking May and her fraught Brexit negotiations, saying he told her "how to do that deal, but she went her own foolish way-was unable to get it done. A disaster!"
London has been scrambling to stem the damage caused by the leaked documents, in which Darroch described the US leader as "inept" and his White House as "uniquely dysfunctional."
Visibly angered by May's continuing support for her ambassador - which Downing Street reiterated on Monday - Trump welcomed the prime minister's impending departure from office.
"The good news for the wonderful United Kingdom is that they will soon have a new Prime Minister," he wrote Monday, declaring that he would have no further contact with Darroch.
By Tuesday, Trump was demanding that Darroch "speak to his country, and Prime Minister May, about their failed Brexit negotiation, and not be upset with my criticism of how badly it was handled."
The cables' publication in the Mail on Sunday newspaper came just a month after Trump enjoyed a state visit to Britain punctuated by a 41-gun salute at Buckingham Palace and a banquet dinner with the queen.
The incident threatens to complicate London's efforts to strike a new trade agreement with the United States, seen as key to mitigating potential damage from Britain's withdrawal from the European Union.
It also comes as British politics are in for a major revamp once May ends her three-year spell in power later this month.
British officials defended Darroch as carrying out his duties by providing "frank" accounts of developments in Washington.
"We have made clear to the US how unfortunate this leak is. The selective extracts leaked do not reflect the closeness of, and the esteem in which we hold, the relationship," the government spokesperson said.
Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said the culprit, if identified, would face "very serious consequences."
The immediate suspicion of the London papers fell on Brexit-backing players in a power struggle within the governing Conservative Party.
Former foreign minister Boris Johnson, a hardliner on Brexit, is the favorite to replace May in a leadership contest against Hunt.
During a stop at the Manchester airport, Johnson told reporters he had "no embarrassment" in saying he had a good relationship with the White House.
"I think it's very important that we have a strong relationship with our most important ally," he said, adding that he himself had been critical of the Brexit negotiations.
"That's one of the reasons I am standing tonight and one of the reasons I am putting myself forward," he said. "I think there is a chance to do things differently, a chance to break away from the failed old can-kicking approaching." The winner of the leadership contest will get to appoint his own US envoy by the time Darroch's term expires in January.
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